A groundbreaking five-year study into gender, refusal and decision-making has revealed how men and women often approach risk, pressure and opportunity differently. Here, Elle Lorenzoni, who helped shape the project’s narrative, ethics and cross-cultural lens, sets out 10 ways business leaders can use those differences to make better commercial decisions.
Business leaders spend vast sums trying to improve decision-making. Many invest in data, AI forecasting, behavioural tools, leadership training, market analysis and risk models in a bid to reduce uncertainty and make better calls under pressure.
Yet most still overlook one of the most practical sources of decision intelligence in their own organisation: the different ways men and women often assess risk, read pressure, process consequence and choose when to act.
Our groundbreaking research for No! The Book examined how men and women respond to pressure, refusal, uncertainty and social cues. The pioneering, five-year study drew on interviews with women from Turkey, Switzerland, Italy and the US, behavioural research, social observation, AI simulations, social history and input from external experts. Although the original focus was communication and the power of refusal, the findings have strong relevance for business leadership because decision-making sits at the centre of both.

The research points to an interesting and clear pattern. We found that men are often more likely to value speed, directness, visible confidence and early commitment, whilst women are often more likely to weigh context, consequence, emotional temperature and the likely impact of a decision on other people.
These are broad tendencies, rather than fixed rules, of course, but they are useful because organisations make decisions through people, and people bring learned habits into every boardroom, negotiation, hiring process and crisis meeting.
A male decision-maker, for instance, may be more comfortable making the call before every detail is known. That can be useful. Businesses need people who will put a stake in the ground, keep a deal moving, back a team under pressure and stop a live opportunity disappearing into another round of discussion. The problem starts when the room begins to reward the sound of certainty more than the quality of the judgement behind it. At that point, the person who sounds most assured can end up carrying more influence than the person who has read the risk more accurately.
A female decision-maker, by contrast, may be more likely to map the wider field before committing. We found that she is more likely to ask who will be affected, where resistance may appear, how the decision will land, what unseen risk sits behind the numbers, and whether the room has missed something important. This can create stronger execution, better risk control, improved client handling and fewer avoidable mistakes. The danger here comes when women expect their mistakes to be judged more harshly, their tone examined more closely and their authority questioned more readily. Some arrive with the evidence assembled, the objections anticipated and the case already defended. A leader who reads that as uncertainty may miss the discipline inside the process.
The strongest businesses harness the different strengths men and women often bring to decisions. Good leadership means knowing when to use male strengths such as speed, confidence and appetite for risk, when to use female strengths such as context, caution and consequence-reading, and how to combine both before the company commits.
Here are 10 ways leaders can use these differences to improve decisions:
1. Identify the dominant decision style in the room
Every leadership team has a prevailing rhythm. Some move quickly towards action while others circle around risk. Others defer to the most senior voice or reward the most confident one. Leaders should know whether their organisation is biased towards speed, caution, consensus, hierarchy or force of personality. Once that pattern is visible, it becomes easier to correct.
2. Use male and female decision strengths at different stages
Early-stage growth decisions often benefit from boldness, appetite and speed. Implementation decisions often benefit from context, consequence-mapping and a clear reading of people. Risk decisions need both. A leader should decide which judgement is needed at each stage, then bring the right voices forward at the right moment.
3. Separate confidence from accuracy
A person who speaks clearly and quickly may give a meeting direction but that same person may also miss detail, weak signals or downstream risk. Leaders should track who is right over time, who sees problems early, who improves the final decision and who adapts when new evidence appears.
4. Caution is risk intelligence
Careful questioning often saves companies from expensive mistakes. When women raise concerns about timing, culture, client reaction, staff capacity or reputational effect, those concerns should be examined as business information. Some warnings will prove unnecessary. Others will identify the precise weakness that later determines success or failure.
5. Treat speed as a commercial asset
Decisions can lose value while leaders search for certainty. Fast decision-makers can prevent an organisation from drifting, over-consulting or missing market openings. The aim is to give speed a proper framework, with clear thresholds for evidence, risk and authority.
6. Watch who has to over-explain
Women often arrive in senior conversations with more supporting evidence than the discussion requires because experience has taught them to defend the point before making it. That adds cost to the meeting and drains force from the contribution. Leaders should notice when the same people need to prove what others are allowed to suggest.
7. Give challenge a formal place in the process
‘Challenge’ should not depend on personal bravery nor discourage the meek from making their point. Before a major decision, leaders should invite the opportunity case, the risk case, the people case, the financial case and the execution case. This structure allows fast decision-makers to keep momentum and careful decision-makers to surface hidden risk without appearing obstructive.
8. Use mixed decision pairs
Important decisions often improve when two leaders with different instincts test the call together. A fast, commercially aggressive leader paired with a contextual, consequence-led leader can produce a stronger recommendation than either would produce alone. This works best when both have equal authority and a shared brief.
9. Review the meeting, not only the outcome
After a decision succeeds or fails, leaders should examine how the judgement formed. Who saw the issue first? Who strengthened the decision? Who raised the concern that later proved important? Who pushed the organisation to act at the right time? This creates a more accurate map of decision talent inside the business.
10. Build promotion around judgement range
Senior leadership needs people who can move quickly, read complexity, hold pressure, challenge authority, manage consequence and make calls with incomplete information. Promotion systems should identify those capabilities directly. A business that promotes only confidence may create brittle leadership. A business that undervalues pace may miss opportunity. The strongest executives develop range.
Used well, these 10 differences can become a major source of advantage. Men and women often bring different information to the decision table because they have learned to read different kinds of risk. Men may read opportunity, timing and competitive movement with force. Women may read consequence, resistance and hidden fragility with precision. Both forms of intelligence belong inside serious business decisions.
Leaders who understand this can build better boardrooms. They can ask faster thinkers to define the moment for action, and task contextual thinkers to identify the risks that execution will expose. Moreover, they can protect challenge from being dismissed as hesitation and protect pace from being buried under process. More importantly still, they can create a decision culture in which confidence is useful, caution is respected and judgement is measured by results.
Elle Lorenzoni is an entrepreneur, writer and commentator focused on gender, power and professional life. She is Women, Work and Enterprise Correspondent for The European, where she writes on workplace culture, female entrepreneurship and leadership.
She holds a BA in Rhetoric from the University of California, Berkeley, a Juris Doctor from Loyola University Chicago School of Law, and an LL.M. from the University of Fribourg in Switzerland. She began her career at the William Morris Agency in Los Angeles before developing ventures including Planning Pretty Picnics and The Spoken World, a platform for spoken word and diasporic storytelling.
Elle is also Creative Director of NO! Why Women Always Start Like This? (And How To Survive The YES That Comes After) https://No-TheBook.com , which examines women’s refusal, autonomy and the social and professional consequences of boundary-setting.
